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Sbarro Exits Bankruptcy Protection

A judge approved the pizza chain's reorganization plan, which includes moving the company headquarters to Columbus, Ohio.
Customers order lunch at a Sbarro restaurant on April 4, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois.
Pizza chain Sbarro says it has exited bankruptcy protection.Scott Olson / Getty Images, file
/ Source: The Associated Press

Pizza chain Sbarro says it has exited bankruptcy protection.

Customers order lunch at a Sbarro restaurant on April 4, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois.
Pizza chain Sbarro says it has exited bankruptcy protection.Scott Olson / Getty Images, file

According to court filings, a judge approved the company's reorganization plan on May 19, and that plan took effect Monday. Sbarro says it will move its company headquarters to Columbus, Ohio, to reduce expenses and be closer to its new Pizza Cucinova business, which lets people build their own pizzas. The first Cucinova restaurant opened in October.

The company says about 40 jobs at its old headquarters in Melville, New York, will be eliminated, but its other 2,700 employees nationwide won't be affected.

The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in March, one month after it closed 182 U.S. locations. It says it doesn't plan any more major closings. Sbarro now has about 800 total restaurants, with almost half of those in North America and the rest overseas.

Sbarro has struggled to turn its business around amid a drop in traffic at shopping mall food courts, and Pizza Cucinova represents a step away from its portfolio of mall-based stores. The company is also trying to update its image for serving re-heated pizza at a time when people are increasingly reaching for foods they feel are fresh and wholesome.

Sbarro also went through bankruptcy reorganization in 2011.

-The Associated Press